Individual acts in this situation has its own fault in which all are to be blamed. Many attempts at passing reforms have occurred in hopes of eliminating racial differences and some progress was achieved. Yet, after the Emancipation Proclamation, when equality laws were placed within the Constitution, small revolutions and acts have been taken by people such as Rosa Parks in which racial differences remains an unbeatable problem in our society. In fact, the justice system that was thought to unite and promote equality in "the land of the free" actually contributes to the destruction of our national idea of racial harmony. Although the Justice system is bound to be equal to all, those who support the police are targeting minorities. Likewise, if the drug brought into the neighborhood is getting unnoticed by the police, how are minorities to be blamed for not following the laws and regulations? According to Callahan in which racial injustice ties to the war on drug, "since the notion of scaling back, let alone stopping, the drug war is too controversial for most politicians to handle, it's hardly surprising that its role in racial profiling should go largely unacknowledged" (Callahan 2). One can infer that Callahan asserts that the history behind racial profiling had a huge impact on the way society views racial issues. Although the history behind this controversy is not assessed, it does put more consideration to this issue as a group of people or citizens. In the discussion about the extent of racial profiling, "most Americans have no idea of the extent of the raced-based profiling that is carried out by the law-enforcement officials and the demoralizing effect it has on its own victims"(Herbert 30). However, it would be impossible to achieve perfection in a society where one can't voice ones opinion. As Herbert explained, state's efforts to control drugs are also a way for dominant group to express power.